| Literature DB >> 28421029 |
Doreen Huppert1, Judy Benson2, Thomas Brandt1.
Abstract
Seasickness and its triggers, symptoms, and preventive measures were well known in antiquity. This chapter is based on an analysis of descriptions of motion sickness, in particular seasickness, in ancient Greek, Roman, and Chinese literature. A systematic search was made from the Greek period beginning with Homer in 800 BC to the late Roman period and ending with Aetios Amidenos in 600 AD, as well as in the Chinese medical classics dating from around 300 AD. Major aspects are the following: body movements caused by waves were identified in all cultures as the critical stimuli. The ancient Greeks and Romans knew that other illnesses and the mental state could precipitate seasickness and that experienced sailors were highly resistant to it (habituation). The Chinese observed that children were particularly susceptible to motion sickness; they first described the type of motion sickness induced by traveling in carts (cart-sickness) or being transported on a litter or in a sedan chair (litter-sickness). The western classics recommended therapeutic measures like fasting or specific diets, pleasant fragrancies, medicinal plants like white hellebore (containing various alkaloids), or a mixture of wine and wormwood. The East knew more unusual measures, such as drinking the urine of young boys, swallowing white sand-syrup, collecting water drops from a bamboo stick, or hiding earth from the kitchen hearth under the hair. The Greek view of the pathophysiology of seasickness was based on the humoral theory of Empedokles and Aristoteles and differed from the Chinese medicine of correspondences, which attributed malfunctions to certain body substances and the life force Qi. Many sources emphasized the impact of seasickness on military actions and famous naval battles such as the Battle of the Red Cliff, which marked the end of the Han dynasty in China, or the defeat of the Spanish Armada by the English in 1588. A peculiar form of motion sickness is associated with Napoleon's camel corps during the Egyptian campaign of 1798/1799, a sickness induced by riding on a camel. Thus, motion sickness in antiquity was known as a physiological response to unadapted body motions during passive transportation as well as a plague at sea.Entities:
Keywords: Chinese antiquity; Greek antiquity; Red Cliff Battle; Roman antiquity; camel-sickness; cart-sickness; litter-sickness; seasickness
Year: 2017 PMID: 28421029 PMCID: PMC5378784 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Classical Roman and Greek sources describing seasickness, alphabetized by author [mod. after Huppert et al. (.
| Author | Biographical data | Opus | Text source/ | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6th c. AD | Corpus Medicorum Graecorum, Vol VIII, 1. Oliveri A. (ed.) | Leipzig, Berlin, 1935 | ||
| Aëtios of Amida | Medical books | |||
| 81–138 AD | Therapeutics of chronic affections. Book II. Adams F. (ed., trans.) | Printed for the Sydenham Society, London, 1956 | ||
| The extant works | ||||
| 2nd c. BC | Bd. I, Zeno et Zenonis discipuli. V. Arnim H. F. (ed) | Leipzig, 1905 | ||
| Ancient stoicism: the editions of fragments and | ||||
| 384–322 BC | Flashar H. (ed., trans.) | Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, Darmstadt, 1962 | ||
| Problems | ||||
| Late 2nd c. AD | Book XV, Garlands (Loeb Classical Library 519) Olson S. D. (ed., trans.) | Harvard University Press, Cambridge, London, 2012 | ||
| Banquet of the learned | ||||
| 100–44 BC | Book III (Loeb Classical Library Vol 39). Peskett A. G. (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, The Macmillan Co., New York, 1914 | ||
| The civil war | ||||
| 25 BC–50 AD | Vol. I (Loeb Classical Library 292). Spencer W. G. (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1935 | ||
| On medicine | ||||
| 106–43 BC | Vol. III, Epistulae ad familiares, XVI.XI. (Loeb Classical Library Vol 230N). Williams W. G. (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1940 | ||
| Letters to his friends | ||||
| 129–199 AD | Vol XVII,1,2; XVIII,1. Claudii Galeni opera omnia. Kühn C. G. (ed) | Leipzig, 1829 | ||
| Aphorisms of Hippocrates and Galen with commentaries | ||||
| 125–180 AD | Auli Gelli Noctes Atticae cum indicibus locupletissimis | Tauchnitz, Lipsiae, 1835 | ||
| Attic nights | ||||
| 5th/6th c. AD | Hesychii Alexandrini Lexicon, Schmidt M. (ed.) | Jena, 1867 | ||
| Alphabetical collection of all words | ||||
| 460–370 BC | IV.VIII.-XV. (Loeb Classical Library Vol 150) | Heinemann, London, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1959 | ||
| Aphorisms | Jones W. H. S. (ed., trans.) | |||
| 8th c. BC | Vol. I,V.304–330; Vol I, V. 442–466 (Loeb Classical Library Vol 104) | Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Heinemann, London, 1945 | ||
| The Odyssey | Murray AT (ed., trans.) | |||
| Schadewaldt W. (ed., trans.) | Artemis Verlag, Zürich, 1966 | |||
| The Odyssee | ||||
| 65–8 BC | I.I.62–85 (Loeb Classical Library Vol 194). Rushton Fairclough H. (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, Harvard University Press, New York, 1942 | ||
| Epistles | ||||
| 60–130 AD | Satire VI (Loeb Classical Library Vol 91N). Ramsay GG (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, Putnam’s Sons, New York, 1928 | ||
| Satires | ||||
| 59 BC–17 AD | Lat.: Book XXI, 25 | Oxford University Press, 1929 (lat.), 2006 (engl.) | ||
| Hannibal’s War | Engl.: Book 21, chapters 25–27 | |||
| 120–180 AD | Vol. II (Loeb Classical Library Vol 54). Harmon AM (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, Putnam’s Sons, New York, 1919 | ||
| Vol. V (Loeb Classical Library Vol 302). Harmon AM (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, Harvard University Press, New York, 1962 | |||
| Vol. VI (Loeb Classical Library Vol 430). Kilburn K (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1949 | |||
| Choulant L (ed., trans.) | Leopoldi Vosii, Leipzig, 1932 | |||
| About Herbal Plants | ||||
| 40–104 AD | Book IV.XXXVII (Loeb Classical Library Vol 94). Ker WCA (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, Putnam’s Sons, New York, 1919 | ||
| Epigrams | ||||
| 325–403 AD | Corpus Medicorum Graecorum, Vol VI.1.1. Raeder I (ed.) | Leipzig, Berlin, 1928 | ||
| Collection of medical relics | ||||
| Corpus Medicorum Graecorum, Vol VI,3. Raeder I (ed.) | Leipzig, Berlin, 1926 | |||
| Synopsis to Eustathium | ||||
| 43–18 AD | The remedies of love (Loeb Classical Library Vol 232). Mozley J. H. (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1957 | ||
| The Art of Love, and Other Poems | ||||
| 14–66 AD | (Loeb Classical Library Vol 15). Peskett M. (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, The Macmillan Co., New York, 1913 | ||
| 170–247 AD | Vol. I, book IV (Loeb Classical Library Vol 16N). Conybeare F. C. (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, The Macmillan Co., New York, 1912 | ||
| The life of Apollonius of Tyana | ||||
| 428/7–348/7 BC | Vol. I, Laws, book I (Loeb Classical Library Vol 187). Bury R. G. (ed., trans.) | Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Heinemann, London, 1940 | ||
| Laws | ||||
| 255–184 BC | Vol I (Loeb Classical Library Vol 60). Nixon N. (ed., trans.) | Heinemann, London, Putnam’s Sons, New York, 1916 | ||
| 23–79 AD | Vol VI, libri XX, XXI and Vol VII, liber XXVII (Loeb Classical Library Vols 392, 393). Jones W. H. S. (ed., trans.) | Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Heinemann, London, 1951, 1956 | ||
| Natural History | ||||
| 40–120 AD | Vol XI (Loeb Classical Library Vol 322). Pearson L, Sandbach F. H. (trans.), Capps E. (ed) | Heinemann, London, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1965 | ||
| Plutarch | Natural phenomena | |||
| Vol. II, 86B-171F., 126 (Loeb Classical Library Vol 222). Babbitt FC (ed., trad.) | Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Heinemann, London, 1962 | |||
| Advice about keeping well | ||||
| Vol X, 798 (Loeb Classical Library Vol 321). Fowler H. N. (trad.), Warmington E. (ed.) | Heinemann, London, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1969 | |||
| Precepts of statecraft | ||||
| 4th c. AD | Corpus Medicorum Latinorum, Vol IV. Howald E, Sigerist H. E. (eds.) | Leipzig, Berlin, 1927 | ||
| Herbarium | ||||
| 7th/6th c. BC | Anthologia lyrica Graeca 3: Iamborum scriptores. Diehl E. (ed.) | Teubner, Leipzig, 1952 | ||
| 54 BC–39 AD | (Loeb Classical Library Vol 464). Edward W. A. (ed., trans.) | Harvard University Press, Cambridge, New York, 1928 | ||
| Seneca the Elder | The Suasoriae of Seneca the Elder | |||
| 4 BC–65 AD | Vol. I, Epistle LIII (Loeb Classical Library Vol 77). Gummere R. M. (ed., trans.) | Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Heinemann, London, 1979 | ||
| Seneca the Younger | The Epistles of Seneca | |||
| 2nd c. AD | Lüneburg H. (ed., trans.), Huber J. C. (ed.) | Lehmann, München, 1842 | ||
| On Midwifery and the Diseases of Women | ||||
| 371–287 BC | Wimmer F. (ed.) | Paris, 1866 | ||
| Theophrast | Enquiry into plants | |||
Important databases of the written tradition of ancient Chinese culture [mod. after Brandt et al. (.
| The encyclopedia |
Chronological overview of relevant text passages in the original Chinese works on cart-sickness and seasickness [mod. after Brandt et al. (.
| Time | Concept | Works | Author |
|---|---|---|---|
| ca. 300 AD | Cart-influence and ship-influence (注車注船, zhuche zhuchuan, literally, influence-cart, influence-ship) | Ge Hong (281–341) | |
| 肘后备急方 (emergency remedies/formulae to carry behind the elbows) | 葛洪; | ||
| 610 AD | Cart-influence and ship-influence | Chao Yuanfang | |
| 诸病源侯论 (discussion about signs and causes of all illnesses) | 巢元方 (ca.550–630) | ||
| 725~777 AD | 苦车 Cart-illness (literally, bitterness-cart) | Poem: 《癸卯岁赴南丰道中闻京师失守寄权士繇韩幼深》 | Du Guji |
| 独孤及 (725~777) | |||
| 983 AD | 苦车Cart-illness (literally, bitterness-cart) | ||
| 太平御覽, (imperial notes from the Taiping era); | |||
| 12th century AD | Ship-illness, cart-illness (苦船 kuchuan 苦车 kuche; literally, illness-ship and illness-cart) | Yao Kuan | |
| 姚寛 (1105–1162) | |||
| 14th century AD | 注船 Ship-influence | Zhu Danxi | |
| 朱丹溪 (1281–1358) | |||
| 1578 AD | 注車注船 Cart-influence and ship-influence | Li Shizhen | |
| 李時珍 (1518–1593) | |||
| 1596 AD | 注船 Ship-influence | Sun Yikui | |
| 孙一奎 (1538–1600) | |||
| 17th/18th century AD | Ship-dizziness and cart-dizziness (晕船晕车 yunchuan yunche, literally, dizziness-ship and dizziness-cart) | Bao Xiang’ao | |
| 鲍相璈 | |||
| 18th century AD | 注船注轿 Ship-influence and litter-influence | Zhai Hao | |
| 翟灏 (?–1788) | |||
Figure 1Roman rowing boat. Fragment of a wall painting of marine life from the Museo Nazionale Romano, Palazzo Massimo alle Terme, Rome (Dalla località Pietra Papa presso il Porto Fluviale di San Paolo lungo la via Portuense. 125–150 AD; private photograph Doreen Huppert).
Figure 2An ancient form of human transportation. A litter was a vehicle without wheels which porters carried by means of wooden rails (see photograph). The cabin of such a litter, also called a sedan chair, could be enclosed for protection from the elements. According to our current understanding of the pathomechanism of motion sickness, this means that while the vestibular system sensed the movements during transportation, the visual system received no information about motion. Such a sensory mismatch is known to facilitate the occurrence of motion sickness. The Chinese called this “litter sickness” or “litter influence” (photograph: sedan chair, China, 1874/75; https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sedan_Chair_Carried_by_Four_Men._China,_1874-75_WDL1930.png).
Figure 3. Frequently used in antiquity as an emetic. Hippokrates (460–370 BC) already recommended it for seasickness in his Aphorismoi. The plant originated in the moderate climate zones of Asia and Europe, where it is still found in the Alps at heights of 700–2,000 m and more. It grows best on meadows and pastures, preferably in moist, nitrogen-rich soil, and reaches a height of 160 cm (https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wei%C3%9Fer_Germer) (25).
Figure 4Spanish Armada. Unknown contemporary artist painting before 1700 AD. The defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 was the beginning of English dominance of the sea. In foreground English ships are shown surrounding and attacking Spanish galleons. Painting in National Maritime Museum, London (https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanische_Armada#/media/File:Invincible_Armada.jpg) (28).
Figure 5Napoleon and camel-sickness. A soldier of Napoleon’s camel (dromedar) regiment, initiated by Napoleon in 1799. Interestingly, the soldiers were considered infantry, because they dismounted to fight. Those who couldn’t adapt to the movements of the “ship of the desert” became seasick, proving rather ineffective combattants (Un soldat du regiment dromedaries, par Wojciech Kossak, 1912; https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Régiment_des_dromedaires#/media/File:WKossak028.jpg).